BlackRock Inc. (NYSE:BLK) got a rebid opportunity to retain New York City pension mandates on Friday, as Comptroller Mark Levine opened a competitive review despite prior climate-related concerns over the asset manager's stewardship approach.

The review covers investment management contracts for the city's public equity index portfolios.

New York City oversees about $127 billion in public equity assets, including roughly $80 billion in passive index funds. BlackRock currently manages about $62 billion of those holdings. The mandate was last competitively bid in 2017 and has been extended twice.

Levine Opens Procurement-Led Review Process

The move follows a November 2025 recommendation from former Comptroller Brad Lander to rebid BlackRock's U.S. public equities index mandate due to concerns that it had weakened climate pressure on portfolio companies. He urged trustees to reopen the mandate after a Net Zero Implementation Plan review of 49 asset managers found that 46 met the city's decarbonization standards, while BlackRock, Fidelity Investments and PanAgora did not meet the pension systems' climate expectations.

Levine said the Comptroller's Office will manage the search under the city's procurement rules, adding, "We cannot keep these relationships on autopilot," and said trustees will conduct a "rigorous review process" to select managers that meet performance standards.

Mamdani's Limited Role In Pension Oversight

New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who once campaigned as a Lander ally, has indirect influence over New York City pension governance through city oversight structures but has not publicly commented on the BlackRock rebid process or the pension funds' climate-related investment review.

BlackRock and Mamdani’s office did not immediately respond to Benzinga‘s request for comment.

The relief for BlackRock comes as it faces broader investor pressure, including reported redemption requests in its $25 billion private credit fund, highlighting strain across its asset management business amid rising client risk concerns.

Winning bidders will still be required to comply with New York City pension funds' climate standards, which include emissions reporting and alignment with long-term decarbonization goals.

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